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Outside linebacker Wesley Woodyard #52 of the Denver Broncos is wrapped up by a New Orleans Saints offensive lineman after intercepting a pass thrown by Drew Brees #9 during a game at Sports Authority Field Field at Mile High on October 28, 2012 in Denver, Colorado. (Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

There’s a lot of talk about D.J. Williams right now, with a lot of people ready to give him the axe and some other folks (like me) who think he deserves one more shot. Here’s the thing. Whatever happens with D.J., one thing that he absolutely should not do is replace Woodyard. He is hungry, he is talented, and he is a workhorse. Whatever happens to D.J., Woodyard is currently the best linebacker we have out there, and he deserves a permanent starting role so long as he continues to play at the level he is currently playing.

First, let’s just talk about his stats. Nine solo tackles, four assists, one pick, one sack, one pass defensd, and one fumble forced (which, sadly, the Saints recovered). He was everywhere on the field and he led the team both statistically and in fact. He played smart, he played fast, and he played hard. He covered ends and backs, he blitzed, and he stuffed the run. The closest other defensive player to him, statistically, was Champ Bailey — who Brees was not afraid to challenge, which must have been quite a treat for him — with six tackles. The pick came on a fourth down stop when the game was tied, and was a critical play that helped the Broncos take a commanding lead that they never gave up.

The Broncos defense played a stunning lights out game against one of the most prolific offenses in the league, and Wesley Woodyard is one of the key reasons that team is playing so well. — E. Halsey Miles

Peyton Manning

With a four-times surgically repaired neck, who would have imagined it would be Peyton Manning‘s thumb that would have everyone in Denver first holding their breath over their prized free agent quarterback? Manning overcame a bloody thumb-to-the-helmet to throw for over 300 yards and three touchdowns Sunday, and he continued to set records in the process.

Manning, who finished 22-of-30 without an interception for a 138.9 rating, became just the second player in NFL history (Steve Young, 1998) to record at least 300 yards passing and three touchdowns in four consecutive games. We’re almost getting complacent to greatness from Manning, but I’m not going to let that affect my ability to give him a game ball. — Monty

Demaryius Thomas

I think the Josh McDaniels hate can officially come to end. It’s been two years and he did draft Demaryius Thomas. All can be forgiven. Thomas is now one of the biggest threats in the entire league. He consistently gets open and with a quarterback who sees all, he is consistently getting the ball for some huge gains. With one more game to go until the halfway point in the season, Thomas has 39 catches for 679 yards and 4 touchdowns. That is a whooping 17.4 yards per catch and as we all have seen, most of those yards are coming after he has the ball in his hands. Brandon Marshall who?

Last season, Demaryius Thomas seemed to get stronger late in the season, so we could be in for a real treat against the inferior teams the Broncos face down the stretch. I do believe the venerable Rod Smith was the last Broncos wide receiver to top 1600 yards receiving in single season, but that mark might be topped by the Broncos emerging star. — Tim Lynch

Broncos’ Backfield

Take away his fumble and Willis McGahee had one of the guttiest performances of his Broncos career. Totalling 155 yards from scrimmage and scoring the team’s first touchdown, McGahee consistently got the Broncos tough yardage when they needed it. How about taking a fullback dive play and running over a linebacker to get a first down? That’s something the Broncos backfield hasn’t had in recent years, a tough running back that can punch it in from short distance. Last night, McGahee was phenomenal.

And the rookie, he’s the real deal. When McGahee got dinged up in the first half, Ronnie Hillman got his most extensive action of the season thus far. Even with McGahee back in the game, the Broncos continued to work the explosive Hillman into the offense, feeding him a career-high fourteen carries, which he turned into 86 yards (just over six yards a carry). Hillman showed a lot of promise last night and McGahee, save his fumble–he needs to work on ball security, was reliable in crunch time.

Both running backs get Game Balls from me this week. As do the offensive line (but somebody else can award the o-line, particularly Ryan Clady, who was incredible, hint, hint). – Jon Heath

Derek Wolfe

Derek Wolfe was drafted for his relentlessness, and it’s about time we honored that aspect of this rookie’s play with a game ball. Wolfe didn’t have a huge impact on the stat sheet — he notched two tackles — but that doesn’t tell the tale of how Wolfe was consistently in Drew Brees‘ face, all game. In my opinion, one Brees fumble should be attributed to Wolfe, as he pushed a Saints blocker into Brees’ throwing motion, causing Brees to lose the ball. The rookie has proved to be the third pass rush threat on the Broncos defense. — Monty

Mitch Unrein

A defensive tackle playing fullback to launch Willis McGahee into the end zone? That gets a game ball. — Monty

Broncos coaches

A total team win deserves a total team Game Ball. The Broncos held the Saints to 0 of 5 on third downs in the first half. The offense outgained the Saints by nearly 300 yards. On a night when John Fox earned his 200th win in the NFL as an NFL coach (assistant positions included), he clearly had his men prepared. — Monty

Bryan

WW for sure deserves a game ball. I also agree with E.H.M.’s plea to not replace WW with DJ. The dude is balling out of control right now.

We knew last year DT was going to be a special player. He just needed someone to get him the ball. Now that he has the QB that can do that, he’s showing just how much of a beast he can really be. As of right now, he has 7 more catches this year than all of last year..679 yards vs 551 last year, and 4 TD’s. And we still have 8 more games to go!

Special Teams play looked very good Sunday night also. When it came time to punt, Colquitt left the Saints with a very long field to go. 5 punts, 3 of which were inside the 20. Holliday (sometimes unnerving -pause- before heading up field) looked like he could have taken just about any punt to the house.

Game ball to the defensive unit. A high powered Saints offense had 11 meaningful possessions. 252 yards (80 of those were in garbage time), 2 TD’s (1 in the mentioned garbage time), 1 INT and forced 8, yes EIGHT, punts! 5 three and outs! AWESOME!

http://www.facebook.com/toxik.zine Toxik Zine

anyone else get mad when the Saints scored a TD in the 4th?

BroncosWin

Baily was on the bench…. nuff said

BroncosWin

Man… I hope Del Rio stays a while… it would be nice to have some stability at Defensive Coordinator.

I was talking to my dad after the win in SD about what a genius Del Rio has been this year… the numbers don’t lie. Jack seems to be able to completely figure out and shutdown the entire offense of the apposing team at half. Talk about making adjustments! This defense has allowed a total of 13 second half points in 8 games! Now that’s playing lights out.